India And Russia To Build 200 Military Helicopters

BANGALORE, INDIA: Advanced Light Helicopters (ALH) of the Indian Air Force's Sarang aerobatics team perform during the inaugural function of the Aero India 2005 airshow at the Yelahanka Air Force Station on the outskirts of Bangalore, 09 February 2005. More than 200 foreign aviation firms from 31 countries are showcasing their products in India's hight tech capital at the five day-long Aero India, billed as the largest air show in South Asia. The United States, Britain, France, Russia, Israel, China and Malaysia are among the nations participating in the five day-long biennial show. AFP PHOTO/INDRANIL MUKHERJEE (Photo credit should read INDRANIL MUKHERJEE/AFP/Getty Images)

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MOSCOW -- In a move aimed at boosting India's defence sector, 200 helicopters will be manufactured in the country with Russian collaboration as part of intensification and diversification of their strategic ties.

The agreement, reached recently, is one of the several new defence projects on which the two countries are working on, including under the ambit of 'Make in India' programme, Indian Ambassador to Russia P S Raghavan told PTI here.

He underlined that the decades-old defence cooperation with Russia remains vibrant despite India purchasing military equipment from other countries, like the recent decision to buy 36 Rafale fighter aircraft from France.

"This (India-Russia ties) is a huge, broad based relationship, getting broader every day," he said.

"Recently, we have agreed to joint manufacture of helicopters in India... Joint manufacture of 200 helicopters in India is big bang. If two countries decide to manufacture 200 helicopters in India with transfer of technology, and licence production, this is big bang," he said.

He said this could possibly be the first defence project under 'Make in India' initiative.

Raghavan was responding when asked to comment on the perception that the defence relations between India and Russia are getting diluted as New Delhi has been looking at other countries for military purchases.

Maintaining that India-Russia defence ties remain vibrant, he said, "people notice few things we do which are non-Russian... There are newer and newer products and newer and newer projects which don't get noticed and attention gets diverted to few things that we do outside Russia."

He said a number of projects are under active discussions and "sooner or later, they will come out in the open." He, however, refused to give details about these, saying there can be no disclosure till the decisions are firmed up.

While dismissing the perception that the vibrancy of India-Russia ties in defence sector are getting eroded, the Ambassador said, "some impressions get formed on the basis of inaccurate or incomplete information."

Acknowledging that India is diversifying its defence purchases "as many countries do" to take advantage of opportunities, he said, "But our armed forces are 60-70 per cent dependent on Russian supplies. That is a reality that cannot change overnight."